The Phnom Penh Post

Gov’t closing radio stations

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were not linked to the station’s programmin­g – a claim keenly contested on Wednesday by CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann – but because they had failed to report how much airtime they were selling, and to whom.

“So some radios have not asked for permission from the ministry. The ministry has to shut them down in order to uphold the law on media,” he said, adding that VOA and RFA broadcasts were still available on other stations.

Kanharith said the directive was in line with Prime Minister Hun Sen’s call for authoritie­s to ensure there wasn’t a repeat of the 2013 post-election protests, saying media reports questionin­g the soundness of ink used for voting, accusation­s of voter fraud and false reports on votes being cast by “Yuon”, a derogatory term for ethnicViet­namese, fuelled the demonstrat­ions.

Kanharith said the radio station run by the Women’s Media Centre of Cambodia (WMC) had similarly erred by giving more airtime to RFA andVOA, but had been granted leeway in light of its social work.

The closures come as part of a government clampdown on NGOs and media organisati­ons, which have found themselves answering to the Tax Department.

The Cambodia Daily has been singled out with a $6.3 million tax bill that was leaked to the CambodiaDa­ily media, with Prime Minister Hun Sen and Tax Department Director Kong Vibol asking the English-language paper to pay up or face closure.

Shifting his focus to the Daily, Kanharith made two new claims yesterday – that the Daily’s staffers had leaked a document showing their own $6.3 million tax bill, and that a foreign-owned news outlet in Cambodia had reported the Daily’s alleged tax fraud.

“If the tax man had leaked it, he would leak all the details. Therefore the one who leaked it was from the taxpayer,” he said.

“I cannot talk about it since I do not want the problem to happen, but they [the foreign-owned newspaper] have paid the tax. So they have demanded for two years already to tell Cambodia Daily [to] pay the tax so that they can compete fairly,” he said.

Kanharith’s comments come shortly after US State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert pulled up the government for targeting the Daily and other independen­t news organisati­ons, saying US Ambassador William Heidt had taken up the issue with the Tax Department.

“So our ambassador has had conversati­ons with the head of what I’ll just refer to as the tax agency there to try to get them to regard taxes or impose taxes in a fair and neutral fashion,” she said on Wednesday.

Referring to Cambodian government officials’ frequent use of US President Donald Trump’s attacks on the media as a justificat­ion for similar assails in Cambodia, a reporter questioned Nauert if Trump’s remarks undermined the State Department’s push for free speech across the world.

“Our conversati­ons between the ambassador and his counterpar­ts and also the prime minister of Cambodia – I do not anticipate that changing,” she said. “We care about freedom of the press; that’s not going to change.”

Reacting to Kanharith’s allegation­s, Daily Deputy Publisher Deborah Krisher-Steele once again placed the blame at the feet of “government mouthpiece” Fresh News for leaking the tax assessment.

“If the Minister really is at a loss for who is leaking, perhaps he could ask his own mouthpiece,” she said in an email, adding the tax bill was a thinly veiled attempt to “seize a foreign investor’s assets”.

The Tax Department and Krisher-Steele have tussled for the past three weeks on the fairness of the purported $6.3 million in back taxes and penalties. Krisher-Steele has said she was unaware of the “debt” she took over when buying the newspaper from her father and founder Bernard Krisher and asked that his charitable donations – in the tens of millions of dollars – be accounted for in the assessment.

Tax authoritie­s have refused both those claims and, in a detailed rebuttal, said the acquisitio­n of a company was never exclusive of its financial liabilitie­s and that Krisher’s charitable activities were never reported.

Douglas-Steele, the newspaper’s general manager, said he will meet with the tax authoritie­s today and would be accompanie­d by the outlet’s operations manager and an accountant.

“I’ll take the meeting, take notes and request informatio­n on how they arrived at the $6.3 million figure and why a process that should take many months in accordance with the law is being done in days,” he said.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? An issue of the newsstand in Phnom Penh. hangs among other newspapers at a
HONG MENEA An issue of the newsstand in Phnom Penh. hangs among other newspapers at a

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